I began reading the 'alphabet 'series written by Sue Grafton when the first book, 'A is for Alibi' featuring private detective Kinsey Millhone, was published in 1982. Over the years, I continued to read each new offering in the series, with the exception of the last book written, 'Y is for Yesterday'. At the time of Sue Grafton's death in December 2017, I had not yet read this book. I decided that since so much time has gone by since the series started.. 37 years... that I would make a kind of project out of rereading the series. I decided to start at the beginning but this time, I would listen to the audiobook of each novel. I'm curious to discover how these novels have held up to the passage of time. Will they feel dated and unreliable? Or will I love them as much as the first time I read them?
Upon finishing 'A is for Alibi', narrated on audiobook by Mary Peiffer, I'm happy to say that I enjoyed this first book in the series as much as when I read it in 1982. Certainly, as you might expect, a story set in 1982 which was years before the explosion of the technological advances we now enjoy DOES feel dated in some ways. There are no cell phones in this story; instead, Kinsey Millhone is always on the hunt for a public pay phone. Since the internet hadn't been created, Kinsey must conduct her research and background checks on individuals at the public library where she frequently uses microfiche or through public records available at the county courthouse. And of course, instead of organizing the data she collects on a computer, she assembles a collection of 3" x 5" index cards on a bulletin board and she produces her finished case reports for clients on her Smith Corona typewriter. Oddly enough, I didn't find any of these aspects of the story annoying. Perhaps it's because I didn't grow up with the current available technologies. Regardless, the absence of cell phones and computers didn't lessen my enjoyment of this novel. In fact, this absence of technology leant a sort of classic detective noir feeling to the novel.
The book is narrated by Kinsey Millhone herself and opens with a perfect intrpoduction of who she is....
"My name is Kinsey Millhone. I'm a private investigator, licensed by the state of California...
I'm thirty-two years old, twice divorced, no kids... I'm a nice person and I have a lot of friends.
My apartment is small but I like living in a cramped space. I've lived in trailers most of my
life, but lately they've been getting too elaborate for my taste so now I live in one room, a
'bachelorette'. I don't have pets. I don't have houseplants. I spend a lot of time on the road
and I don't like leaving things behind. Aside from the hazards of my profession, my life has
always been ordinary, uneventful and good...... "
In this, Kinsey Millhone's first case, she is visited at her office by a woman named Nikki Fife who has just been paroled after serving an 8-year prison sentence for the murder of her divorce attorney-husband Laurence Fife. Nikki insists that she is innocent and she wants to hire Kinsey to reinvestigate the murder. Although Kinsey is skeptical, she admits to herself that it makes no sense for a guilty woman who has just been released from prison to want to dredge up old controversies and scandals. So she agrees that she will see what she can find but makes no promises.
Kinsey begins her reinvestigation into Laurence Fife's murder with a visit to the Santa Teresa Police Department where she asked Lieutenant Con Dolan for a look at the Fife case files. Because Nikki had been convicted by a jury who purportedly weighed the evidence presented by both the prosecuting and defense attorneys, she wasn't expecting to discover any new evidence. But she was startled to find that just 4 days after Laurence Fife died after ingesting allergy medication laced with oleander, a young woman named Libby Glass, who had been an accountant in Fife's law firm, had also died from oleander poisoning. The police had been aware of Libby Glass's death but hadn't been able to connect her death to Nikki Fife. Con Dolan was certain that Nikki had also murdered Libby Glass but Kinsey wasn't so sure. Kinsey believed Nikki had been telling her the truth and she was determined to follow the new clues to get to the bottom of the mystery of just who murdered Laurence Fife and Libby Glass.. and why.
Kinsey started her investigation the old fashioned way... using plenty of 'shoe leather' and interviewing all of the people in Laurence Fife and Libby Glass's life at the time of their murders. Her potential suspect list was long. She interviewed and reinterviewed Laurence's ex-wife Gwen and their two grown children, Greg and Diane; Laurence's former business partner and colleague, Charlie Scorsoni; Laurence's former secretary, Sharon Rapier and of course, she also tracked down and interviewed Libby Glass's family and colleagues, including her emotionally devastated parents and her rude and bad-tempered ex-boyfriend Lyle. These interviews keep Kinsey on the road, traveling from Santa Teresa to Los Angeles and finally to Las Vegas and with each of these interviews, she began to form a mental picture of what had been happening in the victims' lives right before the murder. Kinsey realized she was getting closer to the murderer and who one of her interviewees is murdered, Kinsey also realizes that the murderer is getting closer to HER and her life is in danger. Can she wrap up this case before it's too late?
I was happy and a little surprised at how much I enjoyed rereading 'A is for Alibi' after so many years. Although the plot was vaguely familiar to me, I had no memory of how the case was ultimately resolved. And despite the fact that Kinsey drives around in her '68 VW 'Bug' and has terrible dietary habits (or maybe BECAUSE of those things), I find that I still really like her character. I enjoy her independence and the fact that although she's tough on the outside, she isn't all that tough on the inside and can empathize with her clients, regardless of how unsavory some of them may seem. I look forward to making my way through the 'alphabet' series once again.